Once again I am compelled to believe that Tolkien’s mythology is the real mythology of the world, and all others are just copy-cats. I am also 100% on board with Tolkien’s Atlantis complex.
Despite a lot of complaints about David Day’s constant comparisons and parallels of Tolkien’s characters to popular characters in Greek, Roman, Norse, etc. mythology, I think the author here was just accentuating the theory that Tolkien is sharing the real world mythology, and all other mythologies and religions stem from his. I personally love believing this fantasy, and it shows the genius of Tolkien yet again.
The only time I found myself speed-reading through was a section in the final quarter of the book (the Third Age) where it basically felt like just a long synopsis of The Hobbit and LOTR…which I already know like the back of my hand.
I personally would have preferred this book’s layout as a collection of all the heroes (still in a somewhat chronological order) with detailed descriptions of each, instead of just the whole book being laid out as a chronology of the stories, with some heroes popping back up periodically in relation to when they appear in Tolkien’s books (such as Elrond, being present in The Silmarillion, The Hobbit, and The Lord of the Rings). This resulted in a lot of repetition near the final quarter of the book.
Considering that everyone reading these books are already Tolkien fans and know all the chronological events of each book, I think just detailed pages or chapters on each of Tolkien’s heroes would have been more enjoyable.
In all, not my favorite of the World of Tolkien series, but still an enjoyable revisit to Middle-Earth and the genius of Tolkien’s complex intellect yet again.